The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Leafy green diet could prevent major cause of blindness — Research

-

SYDNEY: Eating green leafy vegetables could help prevent the macular degenerati­on eye disease, a major cause of blindness, according to latest Australian research.

The study, which looked at more than 2,000 Australian adults over a 15-year period, showed that vegetable nitrates found mainly in green leafy vegetables as well as beetroot could help reduce the risk of developing the disease, the Westmead Institute for Medical Research said in a statement on its findings yesterday.

“This is the first time the effects of dietary nitrates on macular degenerati­on risk has been measured,” Xinhua news agency quoted lead researcher Associate Prof Bamini Gopinath as saying.

“Essentiall­y, we found that people who ate 100 to 142mg of vegetable nitrates every day had a reduced risk of developing early signs of macular degenerati­on compared with people who ate fewer nitrates.”

Spinach has about 20mg of nitrate per 100gm, while beetroot has nearly 15mg of nitrate per 100gm, according to the institute.

The study did not show any additional benefits for people who ate more than 142mg of dietary nitrate daily. It also did not show any significan­t links between vegetable nitrates and late stage age-related macular degenerati­on. The findings were published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

Macular degenerati­on refers to the group of degenerati­ve diseases of the retina that cause progressiv­e loss of central vision.

One in seven Australian­s aged over 50 show some signs of the disease and there is currently no cure for it, according to the institute. Age is the strongest known risk factor and the disease is more likely to occur after the age of 50, it said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia